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Understanding visual preferences for landscapes: an examination of the relationship between aesthetics and emotional bonding

The relationship between humans and the quality of the environment have been
examined primarily through two conceptual constructs: landscape aesthetics and place
attachment or emotional place bonding. The former focuses on the physical environment
and the latter focuses on the emotional or symbolic environment. This study focused on
understanding the relationship between the two constructs, and provided a framework to
integrate them toward a more comprehensive visual preference for landscapes. Nasar’s
(1989) symbolic model was used as a guiding concept in the study.
A web-based survey was used to collect people’s responses to landscapes
portrayed in photographs. Four primary measures were used in the survey: landscape
aesthetic, typicality (to a national park), emotional place bonding, and landscape visual
preference. To further examine the effect of place meaning on responses to landscapes,
respondents were told during the survey that landscape pictures were taken from
different places, which were assigned randomly as place labels (national park,
commercial recreation area, local park, and scenic area).
Results indicated that emotional place bonding was significantly and positively
influenced by perceived landscape aesthetics through four components: complexity, mystery, coherence, and legibility. Complexity and mystery had more influence on
emotional place bonding than the other two components. Results also provided empirical
support for Nasar’s (1989) symbolic model. The effect of landscape aesthetics on
landscape visual preference was partially mediated by typicality and emotional place
bonding. The typicality of a scene to a national park was found to positively influence
people’s emotional bonding to the place. The four randomly assigned place labels did
not elicit significantly different preferences or emotional responses to the places.
This study documented how landscape aesthetics and emotional bonding can be
integrated into visual preferences for landscapes. Results also provided evidence for the
potential to use emotional bonding information to manage physical landscapes. The
study contributes to our understanding and can assist with environment planning and
management. Both physical appearance and symbolic/emotional meaning are very
important to human perceptions of landscapes, and other attempts should be made to
understand how the two constructs contribute to visual preference in future research.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/ETD-TAMU-1375
Date15 May 2009
CreatorsCheng, Chia-Kuen
ContributorsShafer, C. Scott
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Dissertation, text
Formatelectronic, application/pdf, born digital

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